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Sweden's state power company to study building mini nuclear plants

TT/The Local
TT/The Local - [email protected]
Sweden's state power company to study building mini nuclear plants
The control room at Ringhals 1 as it was shut down in 2020. Photo: Jonas Lindstedt/TT

Sweden's state power company Vattenfall is looking into building a series of small modular nuclear reactors at the site of its decommissioned Ringhals plant, in what would be the first new nuclear power station in the country since 1980.

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The company's chief executive Anna Borg said in a press release on Tuesday that the first new reactors could come into operation by the early 2030s, "provided that a pilot study concludes that it would be profitable and all other conditions for a future investment decision are met, in particular, new regulations for nuclear power". 

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The statement comes at a time when Sweden's right-wing opposition has politicised the issue of nuclear power, criticising the Social Democrat-led government for allowing the the first two nuclear power plants built at Ringhals near Gothenburg to be decommissioned in 2019 and 2020, five years earlier than intended when they were built.

"I think it's fantastic and exciting news that Vattenfall wants to invest in new nuclear power in southern Sweden," said Carl-Oskar Bolin, chair of the Swedish parliament's business committee. "This is exactly what's required to stabilise power prices in the long run." 

Johan Pehrson, leader of the Liberal Party, accused the Social Democrats of using the power company to play political games. 

"S [the Social Democrats] has woken up and realised that they can't win the election by making Sweden cold, and handing over a dead world to our children," he said. 

Borg told the TT newswire that new nuclear power might be required to meet the demand for emission-free energy.

"We need to find a way forward to meet the increased demand that there is," she said, pointing out that the number of nuclear power stations in operation in Sweden had fallen from ten to six over the last seven years. 

According to the global nuclear proliferation watchdog, the IAEA, there are several SMRs already under construction, and one, a floating reactor in Russia, already under operation. 

Vattenfall said that it planned to carry out a preliminary study in 2023 and 2024, looking at different designs, before giving the green light for construction to start towards the end of the decade. 

SMRs produce around 300MW, about the same as a gas fired power station, and much less than the 1,100MW produced by one of the modules at the power stations built in the 1970s in Sweden. 

As they can be built at equipment suppliers and then shipped to the site where they will be located, they are expected to be cheaper than the current generation of nuclear power plants, which have historically seen enormous cost overruns and delays. 

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